Background The speed and accuracy of decision-making have a well-known trading relationship: hasty decisions are more prone to errors while careful, accurate judgments take more time. Despite the pervasiveness of this speed-accuracy trade-off (SAT) in decision-making, its neural basis is still unknown. Methodology/Principal Findings Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) we show that emphasizing the speed of a perceptual decision at the expense of its accuracy lowers the amount of evidence-related activity in lateral prefrontal cortex. Moreover, this speed-accuracy difference in lateral prefrontal cortex activity correlates with the speed-accuracy difference in the decision criterion metric of signal detection theory. We also show that the same instructions increase baseline activity in a dorso-medial cortical area involved in the internal generation of actions. Conclusions/Significance These findings suggest that the SAT is neurally implemented by modulating not only the amount of externally-derived sensory evidence used to make a decision, but also the internal urge to make a response. We propose that these processes combine to control the temporal dynamics of the speed-accuracy trade-off in decision-making.
fMRI Evidence for a Dual Process Account of the Speed-Accuracy Tradeoff in Decision-Making
Jason Ivanoff,Philip Branning,R. Marois
Published 2008 in PLoS ONE
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2008
- Venue
PLoS ONE
- Publication date
2008-07-09
- Fields of study
Medicine, Physics, Psychology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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